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consul |
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consulChief magistrate of the ancient Roman Republic, after the expulsion of the last king in 510 BC. Two consuls were elected annually by the comitia centuriata (assembly of the Roman people), and their names were used to date the year. With equal power they shared the full civil authority in Rome and the chief military command in the field. After the establishment of the Roman empire the office became far less important. Each consul was attended by 12 Lictors. Consuls convened and presided over the Senate and they saw to the execution of its decrees. They also convened and presided over the comitia centuriata and comitia tributa, conducting elections and putting legislative measures to the vote. Both consuls were from the patrician class until 367 when the Lex Licinia opened the office to plebeians.
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The Roman satirist Juvenal, writing in the first century AD, lamented that "the people that once bestowed commands, consulships, legions, and all else, now meddles no more and longs eagerly for just two things --bread and circuses. He seemed not to know that the office he holds is as powerless as it is expensive to gain, rather like elections to the Roman consulships, which were retained to the end of the empire while Caesars did the ruling. |
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